Withthebiscuit
Well-Known Member
would i be able to seal my door id i have no vent in the closet area???
lol with no ventilation, how do you suppose a cool tube would help him? he would need a cool tube, ducting, and a fan. instead of just ducting and a fan.think u need a cool tube
the door idea i was saying is just like the first picture from bcbuddy. without a fan on the bottom and less ducting. bottom duct would just make a 90 degree turn down or to the side. the top duct would make a 90 degree turn up. this way the exhaust is blowing at the ceiling outside of the door and not down to the intake. also the intake if faced down wont be open for light to enter. plus a hollow door from home depot is smaller and lighter than plywood, you can get the right size for your doorway, and is about $20. the duct is $10 at HD and the fan is $20 at hd, thats $50 for the same thing only cleaner. you can reuse the hinges and door knob you have. ill draw a picture of exactly what i see if you would like. and the best thing is if you can pop it off the hinges and throw the other one back on and the ducts and fan are small and attached to the door for easy moving. take it with you when you move to a new place too.OPTION A;
Step 1: Remove the door and hinges
Step 2: Get a skill saw and some 1/4 inch or more plywood sheeting, cut yourself a new door that is about an inch or two bigger than the frame, so it overlaps (paint it white or match it to your house wall color, remember it's temporary only while you grow.) Do not mount yet.
Step 3: line the inside of door with reflective material or white paint and use styrafoam or anything you can think of to rim the whole door and get a bit of a seal, so the space is air-tight.
Step 4: use a sabre saw/reciprocating saw and cut 2 6inch holes in the door, one at the top and one at the bottom.
Step 5: Mount door with some simple hinges and small screws, tiny holes are not a huge concern and can be fixed.
Step 6: Find a source of fresh air or just room air ( I recommend an open window sometimes of the day ) if that's all you can get and install your intake ducting into the bottom hole and seal with tuck tape (good tape) Also install your intake fan at this time. It be installed on any part of the ducting as long as it's sealed in for max suction. I would mount it into the hole you cut on that door.
Step 6: You must now run your exhaust from the top hole of the door, also install your exhaust fan onto the ducting at this time. Install it on the door, through the hole. You should be able to figure out how to secure it inside the hole.
Step 7: Mount or place an oscillating ( turning ) fan in the grow room to circulate the air in your space.
Step 8: Watch your thermometer drop way down in temperature, also this way humidity shouldn't be a problem either.
This is cheap and easy to do, should be around $100-150 US for materials and fans and should only take you 2-4 hours to do depending on handiness. Your thinking how do I swing the door open to get in and out of the room?? eh? haha. Leave your ducting loose outside the grow room so you can open and close it enough to do your gardening like this. Here's some crappy illustrations of outside your room and inside...
OPTION B;
You can always just cut a couple 6 inch holes in the walls and do your intake/outtake that way. If you cut the holes out intact you can save them and fit them back in and drywall mud/paint the area, fixing the visible damage.
Step 1: Cut two 6 inch holes in space, one up high, one low.
Step 2: Install intake coming from a source of your discretion, find the best possible source, it may require a large bit of ducting and a new vent outside. Or just from a crawlspace or anywhere tucked away. I suggest taping cheesecloth on the entry part of intake for a bit of filtration.
Step 3: Install your exhaust with fan on grow room end and have it run to place it can be dispelled safely using the 6inch ducting.
Step 4: U should use a carbon filter, both option A/B i fogot to mention this, these will eliminate odour,( if that may be a problem later on? It gets mounted before anything on your exhaust line, then your inline fan then the length of ducting example: mount the can high then your inline fan right to it with ducting going out.
Step 5: Now mount/place your osc. fan and you'll be set. seal the door though, best you can.
Here's my setup. I never use closets much, I try to look for easy venting spaces with cool air close by from the outside and a decent place to exhaust. This is just my vegging room but check out my venting setup... it's got the 4 inch stuffed into 6 inch and taped secure, the fan is pushing in cool clean fresh air really well. And my exhaust fan is mounted right up high at the start of my ducting as you'll see. I don't carbon filter this room due to no need. I did all my exhaust.intake fans etc. for $120 US roughly and bout 3 hours. Other than these two ways? I just don't know how you'd pull it off. Here's my pics of my venting setups;
intake behind osc. fan
exhaust up high, 6inch inline fan all sealed up
a good view of how my intake is setup
~ BCbuddy